The Imaginative Conservative

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The Imaginative Conservative
EditorBradley J. Birzer
Stephen M. Klugewicz[1]
CategoriesEditorial journal
PublisherW. Winston Elliott III[1]
FounderBradley J. Birzer[2]
First issueJune 2010
CountryUnited States
Based inHouston, Texas, U.S.
LanguageEnglish
Websitetheimaginativeconservative.org

The Imaginative Conservative (TIC) is an online traditionalist conservative journal published in the United States, founded in 2010.

History[]

The co-founders of TIC were Bradley J. Birzer, the holder of the Russell Amos Kirk chair in American Studies at Hillsdale College, and W. Winston Elliott III, President of the Free Enterprise Institute and a Visiting Professor in Liberal Arts at Houston Baptist University.[3]

Conceived early in 2010 and launched in June of that year, TIC was initially dedicated to promoting conservatism in general and the ideas of Russell Kirk in particular.[2] In its first year it published an article by Steve Masty, a veteran of the Afghanistan conflict, which was deeply critical of American policy and intentions there.[4]

In 2015, TIC republished Russell Kirk's book Prospects for Conservatives,[5] with an introduction by Bradley J. Birzer which called the work a "Christian humanistic manifesto".[2] Also in 2015, the journal published a list of suggested gifts for conservatives, which included badger-hair shaving brushes and Evelyn Waugh's novel Brideshead Revisited.[6]

As of 2021, the journal said of itself that its purpose was to address culture, liberal learning, politics, political economy, literature, the arts, and the American Republic, in the tradition of Kirk, Irving Babbitt, M. E. Bradford, Edmund Burke, Willa Cather, Christopher Dawson, T. S. Eliot, Paul Elmer More, Robert Nisbet, Wilhelm Roepke, Eric Voegelin, Richard M. Weaver, and other leaders of Imaginative Conservatism.[1]

Contributors[]

Notable contributors to The Imaginative Conservative have included

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c "About the Imaginative Conservative", theimaginativeconservative.org, accessed 28 October 2021
  2. ^ a b c Francesco Giubilei, The History of European Conservative Thought (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2019), p. 244
  3. ^ W. Winston Elliott III, Wyoming Catholic College Magazine, Summer 2017, accessed 1 November 2021
  4. ^ Lisa Schiffren, Perfidious Pakistan, Jewish Policy Center, Fall 2021
  5. ^ James Matthew Wilson, The Vision of the Soul (2017), p. 22
  6. ^ Jeffrey Manley, Waugh Novel Recommended in Gift List, Evelyn Waugh Society, December 7, 2015
  7. ^ Lowell S. Gustafson, Villanova University, accessed 28 October 2021
  8. ^ Benjamin Myers, Oklahoma Baptist University, accessed 28 October 2021

External links[]

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